Related Vacation Book Subjects: Washington
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Lewis", sorted by average review score:

Aircraft Control and Simulation
Published in Hardcover by Interscience (05 February, 1992)
Authors: Brian L. Stevens and Frank L. Lewis
Average review score:

Aircraft Control and Simulation
This book is an excelent reference for anyone who works on, has an interest in or has studied the design and modeling of aircrafts. Its explainations are very clear and understandable


Airman's Odyssey
Published in Paperback by Harvest Books (November, 1984)
Authors: Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Lewis Galantiere, and Stuart Gilbert
Average review score:

A great book for anyone to share with friends.
I was exposed to St. Ex in the ninth grade by my French teacher. He had us read the "Little Prince". My dream was to be a pilot and I could relate to the story. Going through college I read other books by St. Ex. and have been a fan ever since. I am a pilot and his writing touch the heart and soul of the reader. Both from physical experience and from spiritual wanderings.

One could call this the essential guide to St. Ex. The selections cover his early years in the airmail service and through his patriotic devotion to duty and his countryman and the fall of France. These are real life adventures with true heros doing what they must for honor and duty serving a new need of mankind delivering the mail, and flying against the odds.

Read it, it's about much more than the early adventure of flying the mail. It's sets one to contemplating as well.


The Alcoholic Family in Recovery: A Developmental Model
Published in Paperback by Guilford Press (August, 2002)
Authors: Stephanie Brown and Virginia Lewis
Average review score:

A Classic In Its Own Time
Stephanie Brown, a professional treasure in both the fields of psychotherapy and addiction, has done it again. This thoughful and compassionate volume captures where the field of alcoholism is going. AA, Al-Anon and other 12-step programs have long recognized that addiction is a family "disease" and that families suffering from it require approaches that honor their collective predicament while taking the time to understand the unique struggles that indivdual members face. Altough there have been other attempts--good ones--by therapists to bring a family systems perspective to alcohol and drug problems all have put their theories of helping before the voices of the people their trying to help. This book is the exception. Brown and her colleague Virginia Lewis accomplish this by inviting readers to ignore conventional boundaries that limit conversation and innovation, while challenging us to expand our thinking and practice. Therapists, counselors, as well as people in recovery and their family members will find this book an invaluable companion and guide on their path from pain and addicition to healing and recovery. I Strongly recommend it.--Jonathan Diamond, Ph.D.; author Narrative Means to Sober Ends


The Alice Companion: A Guide to Lewis Carroll's Alice Books
Published in Hardcover by New York University Press (August, 1998)
Authors: Jo Elwyn Jones, Jo Elwyn Jones, and J. Francis Gladstone
Average review score:

A Useful & Enjoyable Reference Book
I have not yet read this entire book, but over the past few months I have used this book many times to help me learn facts about Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidg Dodgson) and I have always found it interesting and helpful. It could only be better if it were a larger work: perhaps it will be expanded to two volumes. This one volume doesn't touch on everything one might like: E.g., I would like to read more about Dodgson's mathemaical works and interests.


Alice in Wonderland
Published in Hardcover by Candlewick Press (March, 2000)
Authors: Lewis Carroll and Helen Oxenbury
Average review score:

Illustrations are Fabulous
If you are going to buy a copy of Alice in Wonderland make sureyou get this one Illustrated by Helen Oxenbury. Her illustrationsmake what was a good book great. Buy it!


Alice in Wonderland (Book and Charm)
Published in Paperback by HarperFestival (04 April, 2000)
Author: Lewis Carroll
Average review score:

Charming Book and Recommended For All Ages!
I had been searching for my first copy of Alice in Wonderland for the longest time and finally found this one. This is rather a richly designed edition to the Carroll classic. It comes with a necklace too! Alice in Wonderland is one of the few books that have rarely charmed both children and adult readers. The talents of John Tenniel are amazing. The way he draws those detailed pictures is fabulous. AMAZING! There's an illustrator if you had one. The story is so well written. I read this book to my little brothers who love little Alice. They think it is just so joyful. They like the characters, the White Rabbit and the Queen of Hearts. They think they are so funny. I like little Alice and the Rabbit myself, if you'd ask me. This is such an excellent book. Grab it while ya still can!


Alice In Wonderland and Through the Lookin
Published in Paperback by Penguin Putnam~childrens Hc ()
Author: Lewis Carrol
Average review score:

Illogical Nirvana
I have this book, and I must say, it is my favorite book I have ever read. I love the characters, from the mysterious, all-knowing Chesiere Cat, to the illogical Queen of Hearts. I'm sure many of you have seen the movie or at least know somewhat of the story, but reading, like always, parts were left out in the movie, and Carrol's writing style was lost (Because, ya know, movies aren't books) If you like illogicalness, you will LOVE this book. And it's cheap, so you can't go wrong. Buy it. You won't be disappointed.


Alice's Adventure in Wonderland/Through the Looking-Glass
Published in Hardcover by Bloomsbury USA (October, 2001)
Authors: Lewis Carroll, Mervyn Peake, and Colin Dickerman
Average review score:

Magnificent and Hilarious
Lewis Carrol's stories: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass are amazing stories with hilarious lines and trickery. Complete fantasy with dim-witted and funny characters that can outsmart Alice, but not even themselves! Alice's adventures are fantastic and any fantasy lover should take this opportunity in an instant! (Humpty Dumpty makes sense of the Jabberwocky poem!) If you want to laugh hard, read Alice's Adeventures in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass.


Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass: Nonsense, Sense, and Meaning (Twayne's Masterwork Studies, No 81)
Published in Hardcover by Twayne Pub (December, 1991)
Author: Donald Rackin
Average review score:

This is my favorite book.
This is THE BOOK that I would take with me to a desert island


Alice's Adventures under Ground
Published in Hardcover by Word Play Inc. (15 August, 2000)
Authors: Lewis Carroll, Kim Deitch, and Mark Burstein
Average review score:

Alice's Adventures
The editor's discription of this product is all wrong. This is a play based of from Caroll's works.

In this one-act fantasy play Alice's Adventure Under Ground by Christopher Hampton, has a style of surrealism playing with the imagination of a child. This play is based off and is adopted from the writings of Lewis Carroll. This leads it to have a logic all of its own, and presented towards the nonrealistic side of life.

This takes place in a fireside room in Christ Church where Lewis Carroll sits in loneliness to his thoughts. He looks up to a mirror where he sees Alice inside of it for a second before she disappears and he sets up tea. A moment or so later there is a knock and Alice enters the room. He proceeds to tell her stories that draw her into some of tales of Wonderland and as this happens, he and three others become all of the characters Alice would encounter in that strange land of logic. There is no costume change, just physical performances transform them from classy 1860s people to the bizarre people of unique logic.

Although the stories are presented from Alice's adventures of both books, the setting remains inside the room and it is though the imagination the transports us beyond the logic. The room seems be made up slightly abstractly, but it should have a sense that view comes from the eyes of a child. They would turn structure into a twisted surreal image of itself, trying to make it into a not unfriendly place of plain innocence.

Lewis Carroll in this play has that same kind of purity we can see in several conversations with Alice. Like when Alice is trying to convince Carroll the she isn't someone named Mabel, because she knows more things than her. Carroll tests her out.
Carroll:What's four times six?
Alice: Thirteen.
Carroll: Is London the capital of Paris?
Alice:Yes.

The logic from the books play nicely in all of the childlike scenes, always it creates wonder in common sense and tearing apart the ideas of what adults may think a proper. It reminds me of the purity of the movie Charlie and the Chocolate Factory where what may seem true to life is not a constant everywhere. Only through our imaginations, can we let ourselves free from structure and see things with new eyes. Everything real will be surreal and that will become the normal


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Washington
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